Renal nerves and renal responses to head-up tilt in dogs
T. V. Peterson, N. L. Hurst and J. A. Richardson Experiments were performed in anesthetized dogs to compare the effects of acute and chronic unilateral renal denervation on the renal responses to head-up tilt and to assess denervation hypersensitivity to infused norepinephrine (NE). Responses of the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology integrative and comparative physiology, 1987-05, Vol.252 (5), p.979-R986 |
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Zusammenfassung: | T. V. Peterson, N. L. Hurst and J. A. Richardson
Experiments were performed in anesthetized dogs to compare the effects of
acute and chronic unilateral renal denervation on the renal responses to
head-up tilt and to assess denervation hypersensitivity to infused
norepinephrine (NE). Responses of the denervated kidney were compared with
those of the contralateral innervated kidney in each animal. With acute
denervation, 40 min of 45 degrees head-up tilt decreased urine flow (V)
37%, absolute sodium excretion (UNaV) 53%, and fractional sodium excretion
(FENa+) 44% in the innervated kidneys, but no decreases occurred in the
denervated kidneys. NE infusion (125 ng X kg-1 X min-1) increased arterial
pressure by 11 mmHg and increased V, UNaV, and FENa+ in both kidneys. In
the chronically denervated animals (2-4 wk prior to experiment) tilt
decreased V by 32%, UNaV by 44%, and FENa+ by 21% in the innervated
kidneys, but again no changes occurred in the denervated kidneys. NE
infusion in this group also increased arterial pressure approximately 11
mmHg and caused V, UNaV, and FENa+ to increase in the innervated kidneys
but decrease in the denervated kidneys. These results demonstrate that the
renal responses to tilt are abolished by both acute and chronic renal
denervation even though the chronically denervated kidney is hypersensitive
to NE-stimulated fluid reabsorption. Therefore endogenous plasma NE levels
must not increase enough during tilt such that this hypersensitivity
phenomenon can compensate for chronic ablation of the renal nerves. |
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ISSN: | 0363-6119 0002-9513 1522-1490 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpregu.1987.252.5.R979 |